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Duck Creek Aqueduct Covered Bridge
Society: Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Bridges Era: 1840-1849 DateCreated: 1839 19001-19041 Pennington Rd. Metamora State: IN Zip: 47030 Country: USA Website: Creator:

Duck Creek Aqueduct is a rare surviving example of a covered timber aqueduct. It was one of several similar structures on the Whitewater Canal, which operated between the Whitewater Valley and the Ohio River from 1839 to 1865. After being displaced by the railroad, the canal supplied hydraulic power for the industrial districts at Metamora and Brookville.

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Image Credit: Anthony Dillon Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Doe River (Elizabethton) Bridge
Society: Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Bridges Era: 1880-1889 DateCreated: 1884 Elizabethton State: TN Zip: 37643 Country: USA Website: Creator:

Doe River Bridge is a fine example of a timber Howe truss, one of the most widely-used timber bridge designs. Built in 1884, this structure played an integral role in the development of the City of Elizabethton, Tennessee, and it is a rare example of a covered bridge that survives in an urban setting.

The original contract specified the unusual hip roof design, which resembles covered bridges in central Europe. The structure is very well-maintained and still carries automobile traffic. The bridge was restored in 2003.

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Image Credit: Brent Moore, Nashville Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Bunker Hill Covered Bridge
Society: Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Bridges Era: 1890-1899 DateCreated: 1895 4160 US-70 State: NC Zip: 28610 Country: USA Website: https://catawbahistory.org/bunker-hill-covered-bridge Creator: Andrew L. Ramsour

Bunker Hill Bridge is the only surviving Haupt truss bridge in the U.S. and one of only two surviving covered bridges in North Carolina. Patented in 1839, the Haupt truss featured diagonal braces spanning multiple panels, which was an attempt to eliminate the cross-strain found in lattice truss bridges. Although it was almost immediately eclipsed by the Howe truss and never reached the mainstream of covered bridge building, the Haupt truss is of interest for its association with Gen.

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Image Credit: Catawba County Historical Association Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Ashuelot Covered Bridge
Society: Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Bridges Era: 1860-1869 DateCreated: 1865 20 Hampshire Ct, , NH Ashuelot State: NH Zip: 03441 Country: USA Website: Creator:

The Ashuelot Covered Bridge is located at the center of Ashuelot, NH. It is a Town lattice truss bridge, spanning the Ashuelot River in a roughly north-south orientation. It consists of two spans with a total length of 178 feet (54 m). The total width of the bridge is 29 feet (8.8 m), and has a central roadway and sidewalks (measuring 3'10" in width) on each side. The bridge rests on stone abutments and a central pier. The abutments have been reinforced with concrete since the bridge was built, and the central pier has been protected by a metal breakwater.

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Image Credit: Edwin S. Grosvenor Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Ackley Covered Bridge
Society: Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Bridges Era: 1830-1839 DateCreated: 1832 20900 Oakwood Blvd. Dearborn State: MI Zip: 48124 Country: USA Website: Creator: Joshua Ackley

Ackley Bridge is an excellent example of a multiple kingpost truss and a noteworthy early example of covered bridge preservation efforts in the United States. Built in 1832 by Joshua Ackley (b.1805) and Daniel Clouse (b.1812), Ackley Bridge originally spanned Enslow’s Branch of Wheeling Creek between Greene County and Washington County in Pennsylvania, where it carried traffic for over a century.

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Image Credit: The Henry Ford Image Caption: The Ackley Covered Bridge was moved to the Henry Ford Museum and restored. Era_date_from:
Grand Central Terminal
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Era: 1910-1919 DateCreated: 1913 89 E 42nd St New York State: NY Zip: Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/project/grand-central-terminal/ Creator: Wilgus, William J.

Spearheaded by Chief Engineer William J. Wilgus and constructed under challenging conditions with no interruption of existing train service, Grand Central Terminal was a triumph of innovative engineering in the design of urban transportation centers. Its novel, two-level station, made possible by electric traction, streamlined both train and passenger movement by separating long-haul and suburban traffic and employing an extensive system of pedestrian ramps throughout the facility.

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Image Credit: Courtesy Wikicommons/Sracer357 (CC BY-SA 3.0) Image Caption: Grand Central Terminal Main Lobby Era_date_from:
Huey Long Bridge
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Era: 1930s DateCreated: 1935 Huey P Long Bridge Bridge City, LA 70094 State: LA Zip: Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/project/huey-p--long-bridge/ Creator: Modjeski, Ralph

"It remains today one of the great bridge engineering accomplishments for railway and highway bridges built in the country." 
 - Historic American Engineering Record, Southeast Regional Office, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, 2005

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Lake Pontchartrain Causeway
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Bridges Era: 1950s DateCreated: 1956 Lake Pontchartrain Causeway New Orleans State: LA Zip: Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/project/lake-pontchartrain-causeway-bridge/ Creator: Upson, Dr. Maxwell

In the 1940s and 1950s, New Orleans experienced growth. Unfortunately, access from the north to the City continued to be limited by Lake Pontchartrain. Driving around the Lake was a time consuming effort. During this time period, a renewed interest developed to provide a direct connection across the center of the Lake to the north shore. As a result, the Greater New Orleans Expressway Commission was formed to build the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway Bridge. The original bridge (southbound) was opened on August 30, 1956.

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Image Credit: Courtesy Flickr/glennaa (CC BY 2.0) Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Newark Airport
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Air and Space Transportation Era: 1920s DateCreated: 1928 3 Brewster Rd newark State: NJ Zip: Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/project/newark-airport/ Creator:

In May 1927, the same month of Charles A. Lindbergh's famous transatlantic flight from New York to Paris, a fact-finding commission appointed by the U.S. Secretary of Commerce concluded that Newark would be the ideal location for an airfield to serve the greater New York/New Jersey metropolitan area.

Civic leaders wasted no time; construction began on the Newark Airport in January 1928. Nine months and $1,750,000 later, 68 acres of soggy marshland had been filled and converted to an airport.

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Image Credit: Image Caption: "(D)etails of traffic control have been so completely worked out as to eliminate any possible conflict between scheduled air line operations and racing activities..." 
 - Major John Berry, An Air Terminal Extraordinary, 1930
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Tunnel
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Era: 1930s DateCreated: 1930 Zion - Mount Carmel Hwy Hurricane State: UT Zip: Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/project/zion-mt--carmel-tunnel---hwy/ Creator:

With the dawn of the automobile age at the beginning of the Twentieth Century, the entire nation started to demand better roads. In the 1910s, motorists and businessmen in Utah became aware of the possibilities of tourism as a business. Soon the state of Utah and the federal government responded with a decades-long program to improve transportation to and within Zion National Park.

Several factors argued for a road through Zion National Park: 

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Image Credit: Courtesy Flickr/Ken Lund (CC BY-SA 2.0) Image Caption: The spectacular scenery of Zion National Park along the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway, S.R. 9, east of the Zion tunnel. Era_date_from:
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Innovations

Prehistoric Mesa Verde Reservoirs

Four prehistoric reservoirs at Mesa Verde National Park were constructed and used between AD 750 and AD 1180. They are: Morefield Reservoir (in Morefield Canyon), Far View Reservoir (on Chapin Mesa), Sagebrush Reservoir (on an unnamed mesa), and Box Elder Reservoir (in Prater Canyon). These four…

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Great Western Railway

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Holland Tunnel

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The Espada Aqueduct, running over the Piedras Creek

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Acquedotto Traiano-Paolo

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Acueducto de Queretaro

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Acueducto de Segovia

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Alaska Highway

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Allegheny Portage Railroad

In an era when roads and canals were the most common means of overland transportation, the Allegheny Portage Railroad provided a novel alternative. The railway carried fully-loaded canal boats over the steep grades of the Allegheny Mountain. The 36-mile system rose almost 2,300 feet above sea…

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Charleston - Hamburg Railroad

Built with a single set of tracks consisting of hardwood rails and wooden ties, and using wooden trestles to carry it over low-lying areas, the 136-mile Charleston-Hamburg Railroad was one of the longest railroads in the world when it was completed in 1833. It also became the first railroad in…

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George Washington Bridge

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